Riots and Rollercoasters: How My Bloody Valentine stole the Jesus & Mary Chain’s thunder

30 years ago this week, the Rollercoaster tour hit the UK, featuring Dinosaur Jr, My Bloody Valentine and Blur. The Jesus & Mary Chain were never as relevant again

Jesus and Mary Chain

I saw the Jesus and Mary Chain at Glasgow Barrowlands in February 1986, just three months after the release of their debut album, Psychocandy . They came on late, I would say deliberately late, so late that the atmosphere – already tense and aggressive – had turned really fucking nasty. 

The Mary Chain were being hailed as ‘The New Sex Pistols ’ and aggro was starting to follow them around. Some of the audience looked like they were there for the aggro.

It’s hard to explain the atmosphere around the Mary Chain at that time. The music was gorgeously catchy, with Phil Spector drum beats and irresistible melodies ripped from Beach Boys via the Ramones . But the subject matter and the imagery surrounding them – the hair, the leather, that sullen, drug-soaked nihilism – and the wall of feedback that howled and crackled through every song, was deliberately antagonistic. 

There’s a Scottish phrase for annoying people: “noising them up” – eg “Uch, ignore him, he’s just noising you up”. It means to wind people up, to antagonise, get noise from them, or maybe bother them with your noise. 

The Mary Chain were noise-up merchants.

“We could have made this a nice song,” their music implied, “but we chose not to. And you know what? Fuck you .” As a Scottish council house kid in Thatcher’s Britain, there was something beautiful about that. They were our band. 

When they finally came on at the Barrowlands, they played for around 40 minutes - nine songs - with their backs to the audience the whole time. The place exploded. Everyone was pogoing, even to slow songs like Just Like Honey . I was 15, my mates 16. We pogoed around like maniacs and a passing grown up – a 30-something man –  punched my mate square in the face. 

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Terrible, right? Except it wasn’t. It was one of the most exciting things I’ve ever been a part of. 

A month later they played North East London Polytechnic and the gig ended in a riot, the band leaving the stage after 20 minutes and the audience taking over, wrecking the venue and the band’s equipment. Later, their manager Alan McGee said, "The audience were not smashing up the hall, they were smashing up pop music."

Darklands followed in 1987. The feedback was more or less gone, and the songs were safe enough to get played on daytime radio, and the band ended up on Top Of The Pops. The record was great, but the whole thing felt defanged. They hadn’t smashed up pop music – they’d just made it a bit better. 

It was understandable. All that aggression they’d stirred up? It was exciting to witness, but imagine facing it every time you took to the stage. Darklands was moody, yeah, but it was also shot through with a dark romanticism.

Automatic (1989) felt formulaic. A bit John-Hughes-movie-soundtrack. A bid for American superstardom. Honey’s Dead came out in March 1992. If it was hard to get excited about, the tour to support the album was a different matter. 

On 25 March they played Glasgow’s SECC on the second date of the Rollercoaster tour, supported by My Bloody Valentine , Dinosaur Jr and Blur. Dinosaur Jr were coming off the back of Bug, a no.1 indie album in the UK, and had a new album Green Mind . Blur? Well, Blur were a bunch of baggy chancers at that point. Did they want to be the Stone Roses or The Jam ? It was hard to tell. 

My Bloody Valentine, meanwhile, were one of the hottest bands in Britain. Loveless had come out the previous November. Massively influenced by the Mary Chain and Dinosaur Jr, with Loveless they – not the Mary Chain – were the ones who had smashed up rock music and created a masterpiece in the process.

Loveless influenced metal bands, stoner rock bands, helped change the way people thought about and used guitars. (In guitar circles they’re calling the age we’re in right now The Age of the Pedal: that obsession with tech, tone and texture can be tracked back to Loveless and Kevin Shield’s endless experimentation and maverick vision.) Its blank-eyed grooviness opened up old punks to a kind of sonic bliss that connected to what was happening in club music. 

So Rollercoaster was an event. Most of the audience had probably never been to the SECC. It was where the major acts played: the three gigs before Rollercoaster were Whitney Houston, Bryan Adams and Tom Petty . This was more than just another gig at the Barrowlands. Which was exactly the idea. 

The Jesus & Mary Chain had played Perry Farrell’s Lollapalooza package tour and found the experience soulless, coming onstage at two in the afternoon after Pearl Jam . 

“So we thought, ‘Why not do a good version of it?’” Jim Reid said later. “We were just trying to shake things up. We were sick to death of plodding up and down the UK on our own, playing the same shitholes.

“The venues we played on Rollercoaster, like Whitley Bay Ice Rink and Glasgow SECC, we could never have done on our own. Instead of a fucking cold Friday night in Nottingham Rock City, it felt a bit more like being a rock star – more a Bowie /Bolan thing. The idea was to have bands from different corners of the indie scene. It was pre-Britpop, so Blur were there to cover the Manchester/baggy thing, the grunge thing was covered by Dinosaur Jr., and then it was the Valentines doing freak-out noise, and we were doing something similar, but more poppy.”

I’m not sure which order the bands played in Glasgow, but I know this: Blur were out of their depth. Dinosaur Jr were boring. The Mary Chain had the lights – and the hits – of a true headline band. And My Bloody Valentine wiped the floor with every single one of them. 

I had seen MBV twice before then: once at the Glasgow College of Building And Printing, supported by a upcoming local band called Teenage Fanclub , and once at the Barrowlands, where their trippy, woozy sounds made me feel stoned (a year or two before I'd actually ever been stoned). 

For Rollercoaster, they came armed with something they were calling The Holocaust. There is footage of The Holocaust online from when they reformed in 2008 but it bears little resemblance to what I remember that night. At the SECC, in the middle of a pulverising You Made Me Realise , the band fixed on one note and played it for about ten minutes. Together. Repeatedly. One. Very. Loud. Note.

In the 2014 documentary, Beautiful Noise , the Smashing Pumpkins ’ Billy Corgan summed up the effect perfectly: “It was full volume and for the first three minutes it's like, ‘Oh okay this is kind of cool. Then you're like: ‘This is really too much. I wish they'd fucking stop’. And then at about 7 minutes it actually became kind of funny. And about 10 minutes in you start actually getting into it.”

The Mary Chain's audience had rioted, smashing up their gear. My Bloody Valentine turned the tables: they unleashed the riot. They smashed up the audience. By the time the Mary Chain came on, we were in pieces. Their polished pop was a relief but it couldn’t beat that. It was the Mary Chain’s last stand. They were never as relevant again.

(Footnote: I saw the Mary Chain at the Roundhouse at the end of 2021. They played Darklands from start to finish. They stopped for an interval. I have never, ever, felt so middle-aged.)

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Scott is the Content Director of Music at Future plc, responsible for the editorial strategy of online and print brands like Louder, Classic Rock, Metal Hammer, Prog, Guitarist, Guitar World, Guitar Player, Total Guitar etc. He was Editor in Chief of Classic Rock magazine for 10 years and Editor of Total Guitar for 4 years and has contributed to The Big Issue, Esquire and more. Scott wrote chapters for two of legendary sleeve designer Storm Thorgerson 's books ( For The Love Of Vinyl , 2009, and Gathering Storm , 2015). He regularly appears on Classic Rock’s podcast, The 20 Million Club , and was the writer/researcher on 2017’s Mick Ronson documentary Beside Bowie . 

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blur rollercoaster tour

Rollercoaster UK Tour 1992

IMG 71498

The Rollercoaster Tour was a 1992 co-headlining concert tour by the Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Dinosaur Jr. and Blur. A one-leg 11-date tour of the United Kingdom, the tour was in support of all four bands' current releases: Blur's debut album Leisure (1991), Dinosaur Jr.'s fourth album Green Mind (1991), My Bloody Valentine's second album Loveless (1991) and The Jesus and Mary Chain's fourth album Honey's Dead (1992).

The tour was curated by the Jesus and Mary Chain's vocalist Jim Reid, who "wanted to break the routine" of performing in small, frequently played venues—such as Nottingham's Rock City—and "cater to all strands of independent rock music". Reid was inspired by, and considered the Rollercoaster Tour a British equivalent to, the North American festival Lollapalooza, which the Jesus and Mary Chain performed at in 1991 and which he considered "fairly disastrous". Each band performed a 45-minute set with no encore and the line-up changed each night of the tour, although the Jesus and Mary Chain performed as the final act on all 11 dates.

My Bloody Valentine ceased live performances in the UK after the tour and did not play again until their 2008 reunion tour. The band's set, which ended with a noise section of their song "You Made Me Realise" referred to as the "holocaust section", reportedly caused attendees' pint glasses to fall out of their hands due to excessive sound pressure levels. Reflecting on the tour, Jim Reid referred to it as "a lot [like a] competition—who could be the loudest? Whose was the best film show? And then there was, who could be most off their tits and still play a show?". The Rollercoaster EP, containing material from Blur, My Bloody Valentine, Dinosaur Jr. and the Jesus and Mary Chain, was issued in Melody Maker in March 1992 to promote the tour.

  • March 24, 1992 Manchester Apollo
  • March 25, 1992 Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre in Glasgow
  • March 27, 1992 Whitley Bay Ice Rink
  • March 28, 1992 Sheffield Arena
  • March 30, 1992 Plymouth Pavilions
  • April 1, 1992 Brighton Centre
  • April 3, 1992 National Ice Rink in Cardiff
  • April 4, 1992 NEC Arena in Birmingham
  • April 5-7, 1992 Brixton Academy in London

Rollercoaster EP

The Rollercoaster EP is an extended play which was distributed free in a March 1992 issue of Melody Maker in support of the Rollercoaster Tour. It includes four songs, "Resigned" from Blur's second album Modern Life is Rubbish (1993), a live version of "The Post" from Dinosaur Jr.'s third album Bug (1987), "Only Shallow" from My Bloody Valentine's second album Loveless (1991) and "Teenage Lust" from the Jesus and Mary Chain's fourth album Honey's Dead (1992).

  • 1 Lollapalooza 1991
  • 2 ABBA Australian Tour 1977 Itinerary

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Rollercoaster Tour: The Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Blur, and Dino Jr together in ‘92

That year, everyone was talking about [Perry Farrell’s touring alt-rock package fest] Lollapalooza, which to us was pretty crap. We did it, playing at 2pm after Pearl Jam, and it was fairly disastrous. So we thought, Why not do a good version of it? We were just trying to shake things up, to make it not like a bunch of boring blokes standing around with pints of beer. We were sick to death of plodding up and down the UK on our own, playing the same shitholes. The venues we playing on Rollercoaster, like Whitley Bay Ice Rink and Glasgow SECC, we could never have done on our own. Instead of a fucking cold Friday night in Nottingham Rock City, it felt a bit more like being a rock star - more a Bowie/Bolan thing. The idea was to have bands from different corners of the indie scene. It was pre-Britpop, so Blur were there to cover the Manchester/baggy thing, the grunge thing was covered by Dinosaur Jr., and then it was the Valentines doing freak-out noise, and we were doing something similar, but more poppy.

  Melody Maker released a promotional Rollercoaster EP that was distributed in their March 1992 issue, but other than that, there exists little artifact from the Rollercoaster Tour. Maybe they should do it again sometime!  

The Rollercoaster Tour on BeatUK  

The Rollercoaster Tour on MTV  

My Bloody Valentine perform at the Brixton Academy in London, April 1992  

Previously on Dangerous Minds: Ever wanted to play bass in Dinosaur Jr? In 1991, you could have applied for the job via fax My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields: ‘Britpop was a government conspiracy!’ Woo-hoo!: A London Tube stop ticket barrier sings Blur’s ‘Song 2’

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Blur Confirm First Tour in Eight Years

The post Blur Confirm First Tour in Eight Years appeared first on Consequence .

Next month, Blur is set to return to the road for her first live shows in eight years. Since confirming their initial comeback, the band has added to her upcoming itinerary with newly announced dates in the UK, Europe, Japan, and South America.

Beginning next month, Blur will play a string of UK warmup shows ahead of festival appearances at Primavera Sound in Barcelona and Madrid. The band’s upcoming itinerary also includes headlining dates in Ireland and The Netherlands, as well as appearances at Denmark’s Roskilde Festival, Norway’s Øya Festival, and Finland’s Flow Festival. They’re also set to visit South America in November. Check out the band’s updated tour itinerary below.

Tickets to Blur’s upcoming tour dates can be purchased here .

Blur last embarked on a tour in 2015 in support of their album, The Magic Whip . In 2019, they reunited for a brief three-song performance at an Africa Express performance staged by frontman Damon Albarn.

Frontman Damon Albarn, who apparently doesn’t sleep, is riding high following a pair of standout performances from his other band, Gorillaz, at Coachella earlier this month .

Blur 2023 Tour Dates:

05/19 – Colchester, UK @ Colchester Arts Centre 05/21 – Eastbourne, UK @ Eastbourne Winter Gardens 05/26 – Wolverhampton, UK @ The Halls 05/28 – Newcastle, UK @ O2 City Hall 06/01 – Barcelona, ES @ Primavera Sound 06/08 – Madrid, ES @ Primavera Sound 06/10 – Porto, PT @ Primavera Porto 06/24 – Dublin, IE @ Malahide Castle 06/27 – Amsterdam, NL @ Ziggo Dome 06/30 – Roskilde, DK @ Roskilde Festival 07/06 – Hérouville-Saint-Clair, FR @ Beauregard Festival 07/08 – London, UK @ Wembley Stadium 07/09 – London, UK @ Wembley Stadium 07/14 – Brittany, FR @ Vieilles Charrues Festival 07/22 – Lucca, IT @ Lucca Summer Festival 08/08 – Lokeren, BE @ Lokerse Feesten 08/10 – Oslo, NO @ Øya Festival 08/11 – Gothenburg, SE @ Way Out West Festival 08/13 – Helsinki, FI @ Flow Festival 08/19 – Tokyo, JP @ Summer Sonic 08/20 – Osaka, JP @ Summer Sonic 11/21 – Bogota, CO @ Movistar Arena

Blur Confirm First Tour in Eight Years Alex Young

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blur rollercoaster tour

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  3. Incredible Hulk Coaster (4K OFF Ride POV)- Universal’s Islands of Adventure, Orlando, FL

  4. ROLLERCOASTER Tour

  5. The Rollercoaster Ride of Bitcoin Cash Halving: What You Need to Know! 🎢💰 #BitcoinCash #BCH #Crypto

  6. Rollercoast

COMMENTS

  1. Rollercoaster Tour

    The Rollercoaster Tour was a 1992 co-headlining concert tour by the Scottish noise pop band the Jesus and Mary Chain, the Irish-English alternative rock band My Bloody Valentine, the English Britpop band Blur and the American indie rock band Dinosaur Jr. [1] A two-leg 34-date tour of the United Kingdom and North America, the U.K. tour was in ...

  2. ROLLERCOASTER Tour

    1992 Blur - Popscene 00:22 Dinosaur Jr. - The Wagon 01:17 My Bloody Valentine - soon 02:22 The Jesus and Mary Chain - Reverence 02:51 live at Brixton Academy...

  3. Rollercoaster Tour

    A piece on the Rollercoaster tour from MTV's 120 Minutes. Includes interviews with the main players and some short clips of gig footage.Not owned by me in an...

  4. Blur

    Rollercoaster Tour features from MTV's Week In Rock & ITV's The Beat.Includes clips of "Colin Zeal", "Pressure On Julian" and "Popscene"

  5. Riots and Rollercoasters: How My Bloody Valentine stole the Jesus

    30 years ago this week, the Rollercoaster tour hit the UK, featuring Dinosaur Jr, My Bloody Valentine and Blur. The Jesus & Mary Chain were never as relevant again

  6. Blur

    Blur went on a 1992 tour of the United States, nicknamed the Rollercoaster tour, despite being £60,000 in debt.They released 'Popscene' at the start of the tour, which represented a turning point for the band, despite only reaching number 32 in the charts.

  7. Blur

    This is "Blur - The Rollercoaster Tour projection video (1992)" by issa on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

  8. Blur Setlist at Sheffield Arena, Sheffield

    Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at Sheffield Arena, Sheffield, England on March 28, 1992 from the Rollercoaster Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  9. Blur Setlist at Brixton Academy, London

    Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at Brixton Academy, London, England on April 7, 1992 from the Rollercoaster Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  10. Blur Concert Map by tour: Rollercoaster Tour

    View the concert map Statistics of Blur for the tour Rollercoaster Tour!

  11. Blur on tour Rollercoaster Tour

    Blur performed 11 concerts on tour Rollercoaster Tour, between Brixton Academy on April 7, 1992 and Manchester Apollo on March 24, 1992

  12. Rollercoaster UK Tour 1992

    The Rollercoaster Tour was a 1992 co-headlining concert tour by the Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Dinosaur Jr. and Blur. A one-leg 11-date tour of the United Kingdom, the tour was in support of all four bands' current releases: Blur's debut album Leisure (1991), Dinosaur Jr.'s fourth album Green Mind (1991), My Bloody Valentine's second album Loveless (1991) and The Jesus and Mary ...

  13. Rollercoaster Tour: The Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Blur

    Ticket Stub from the Rollercoaster Tour, London Jim Reid, singer of the Jesus and Mary Chain spoke about the Rollercoaster Tour in the April 2013 issue of 'MOJO': That year, everyone was talking about [Perry Farrell's touring alt-rock package fest] Lollapalooza, which to us was pretty crap.

  14. Rollercoaster Tour

    The Rollercoaster Tour was a 1992 co-headlining concert tour by the English Britpop band Blur, the American indie rock band Dinosaur Jr., the Irish alternative rock band My Bloody Valentine and the Scottish noise pop band the Jesus and Mary Chain. [1] A one-leg 11-date tour of the United Kingdom, the tour was in support of all four bands' current releases: Blur's debut album Leisure (1991 ...

  15. My Bloody Valentine's 1992 Concert & Tour History

    Rollercoaster Tour Setlists. Brixton Academy: London, England, United Kingdom: Apr 07, 1992 Jesus & Mary Chain / Dinosaur Jr. / Blur / My Bloody Valentine. Setlists ... The Jesus and Mary Chain / My Bloody Valentine / Dinosaur Jr / Blur. Roller-coaster Setlists. Apollo Theater: Manchester, England, United Kingdom: Show Duplicates for Mar 24 ...

  16. Blur playing Pressure on Julian on tour Rollercoaster Tour

    Pressure on Julian by Blur was played on tour Rollercoaster Tour in 4 out of 11 shows, with a probability of 36.36% to listen to it live on this tour

  17. Rollercoaster Tour

    Blur, My Bloody Valentine, Dinosaur Jr, The Jesus And Mary Chain

  18. Rollercoaster 1992 co-headlining concert tour by Blur ...

    Rollercoaster 1992 co-headlining concert tour by Blur, Dinosaur Jr., My Bloody Valentine and Jesus and Mary Chain. Bootleg made by me

  19. Blur Confirm First Tour in Eight Years

    Blur have announced a 2023 tour, including shows in the UK, Europe, and South America. Get more details here.

  20. Blur Confirm First Tour in Eight Years

    The post Blur Confirm First Tour in Eight Years appeared first on Consequence.. Next month, Blur is set to return to the road for her first live shows in eight years. Since confirming their ...

  21. Blur Tour Statistics: Rollercoaster Tour

    View the statistics of songs played live by Blur. Have a look which song was played how often on the tour Rollercoaster Tour!

  22. RollerGhoster tour

    rollerghoster tour 2024 〰️ rollerghoster tour 2024 〰️

  23. Artist Appearances on Blur Concerts

    Blur statistics: Check out who joined Blur on stage at live performance during the tour Rollercoaster Tour.

  24. The Best Concerts Happening In Hong Kong 2024

    Hot off the heels of his world tour "Amazing Kode", Kwok returns to his roots with concerts spanning ten days in August at the Coliseum. ... Be prepared to embark on an emotional rollercoaster of music! ... Photo: AsiaWorld-Expo. Beloved pop rock band LANY is taking a beautiful blur around the world! The band's latest album houses hits ...